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Titan is ready for its close-up: NASA has released a stunning six-image portrait of Saturn’s largest moon.

The wall-worthy print features half a dozen mosaics, constructed using data gathered over 13 years by the Visual and Infrared Mapping Spectrometer (VIMS) instrument aboard the Cassini space probe.

“These six infrared images of Saturn’s moon Titan represent some of the clearest, most seamless-looking global views of the icy moon’s surface produced so far,” the space agency said in a statement.

“The images are the result of a focused effort to smoothly combine data from the multitude of different observations VIMS made under a wide variety of lighting and viewing conditions over the course of Cassini’s mission.”

Launched in October 1997, Cassini was active in space for nearly 20 years. The attached Huygens module docked on Titan in early 2005, marking the first landing in the outer Solar System, and on a moon other than our own.

Titan’s mysterious surface—primarily composed of water ice and rocky material—is not visible to the naked eye; small particles called aerosols in the moon’s upper atmosphere scatter visible light, creating a heavy haze around the planetoid.

Enter VIMS, which is able to peer through infrared “windows” (wavelengths where scattering and absorption is weaker) to snap clear photos.

Still, making mosaics of these images remains a challenge, as data was collected over various flybys under different conditions, creating what NASA described as “very prominent seams … that are quite difficult for imaging scientists to remove.”

“But, through laborious and detailed analyses of the data, along with time-consuming hand-processing of the mosaics, the seams have been mostly removed,” the administration said.

The same technique used to eliminate unsightly lines also emphasizes subtle spectral variations on Titan’s surface. This helps make certain colors more vibrant and consistent, allowing scientists to better understand the moon’s composition.

“This new collection of images is by far the best representation of how the globe of Titan might appear to the casual observer if it weren’t for the moon’s hazy atmosphere,” NASA boasted. “And it likely will not be superseded for some time to come.”